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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
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Basin ag focus of
harvest tour
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H&N photo by Jill Aho
Marshall and Eddie Staunton of Staunton
Farms will store recently harvested Burbank
russet potatoes through July in this
temperature- and humidity-controlled shed. |
By JILL AHO
H&N Staff Writer
October 20, 2008
Lay’s
potato chips, horseradish, toothpaste, Horizon milk
and waterfowl. The commonality? No, not that they’re
all edible; they’re all produced, at least in part,
in the Klamath Basin.
The Klamath Water User’s Association drove home the
idea that the Basin is a productive agricultural
area, with an estimated $298 million impact on the
local economy, in its first fall harvest tour.
Representatives of the media, the financial and
education sectors, farming interests and KWUA board
members spent Friday on a tour bus visiting areas of
the Bureau of Reclamation’s Klamath Project, which
is served by the KWUA.
The tour highlighted benefits of the Klamath
Project, including irrigation pumps that add oxygen
to otherwise unoxygenated water, which may benefit
the endangered sucker. The group also visited
Cal-Ore produce and a potato storage shed at
Staunton Farms, where 1.2 million, 100-pound bags of
produce are processed through 11 months of the year.
The tour also explained the cooperation between
farmers and wildlife managers at the Walking
Wetlands at the Tulelake National Wildlife Refuge.
This unique project involves flooding
farmlands for three years, providing habitat to
local wildlife, and rotating previously flooded land
into agricultural production. The land is leased to
farmers through a sealed bid process.
In a crop-sharing agreement, farmers must plant
cereal grains and leave a portion of the crop to
feed fowl during winter months. Once farmland has
spent three years as a wetland, it is certified
organic, said Klamath Basin National Wildlife
Refuges Manager Ron Cole.
The Walking Wetlands project makes farming more
productive as well, said Luther Horsley, who has
leased land in the refuge. Crops are less bothered
by nematodes and diseases than farmland that has
been continuously farmed.
Cooperation key
For water user and wildlife supporter Rob Crawford,
cooperation between the Fish and Wildlife Service
and area farmers has been an experiment that works.
“Sometimes little conservation efforts can do a
lot,” Crawford said. Crawford has taken 70 acres of
his personal property and turned it into wetlands.
The tour wrapped up overlooking Lost River, where
water management is especially tricky because so
little precipitation falls on the area, and the
Clear Lake reservoir evaporates water, said Don
Russell of Horsefly Irrigation District.
“We’ve had a few good years, but that’s hard to
remember quite frankly,” Russell said.
For Sterling Savings Bank Shasta branch employees,
the trip was eye-opening.
Branch manager Angela Nichols said, “It’s good to
see what the farmers do.” Nichols thinks the
experience will help her better understand her
customers.
“The farmers had a whole different perspective,” she
said.
Side Bar
Local farmer Steve
Kandra gave a brief history of the Klamath
Project Friday.
Authorized in 1905 by
the Bureau of Reclamation, the Klamath Basin
Project encompasses 220,000 acres, or about 340
square miles. Kandra said it is the third oldest
Reclamation Project in the U.S. It began
irrigation services to farmers in 1907, although
irrigation has existed in the Basin since the
1860s.
Before the Project,
much of what is now farmland was under shallow
water. The point of the project was to divert
that water into the Klamath River
and use the land underneath as farmland. Now,
water is re-circulated through the irrigation
channels to be reused within the Project before
being returned to the Klamath River.
“I would claim we put a lot of water
back into the system,” Kandra said. Issues
surrounding water are a high priority for many
constituents, including local tribes, fish and
wildlife officials, and many farmers.
Although the water systems extend
north of Upper Klamath Lake, the lake
contributes to the water quality further
downstream. A naturally eutrophic body, Upper
Klamath Lake has high levels of phosphorus and
other nutrients, contributing to the high levels
of blue green algae and low levels of oxygen.
Bob Gasser, of Basin Fertilizer, said
farming is often blamed for the naturally
occurring phenomena in the lake.
“As you saw this
morning, over 95 percent of agricultural
production is below Klamath Lake,” Gasser said,
referring to maps shown prior to the trip. When
water is delivered to wildlife refuges below
Klamath Lake, “water has less phosphates due to
the Klamath Project,” Gasser said.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section
107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or
payment to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this
information for non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more
information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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